ZoomCare reviews

2.8

34% would recommend to a friend

(381 total reviews)
avatar

Jeff Fee

37% approve of CEO

24% positive business outlook

ZoomCare has an employee rating of 2.8 out of 5 stars, based on 381 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an average working experience there. The ZoomCare employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Healthcare industry (3.4 stars).

Reviews by job title

381 reviews
1.0
May 2, 2018

Healthcare Reality Show

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

You work with some amazing healthcare professionals, associates, and help-team/benefits members. The hours are fantastic for people with busy lives, and overtime is abundant. The model of Zoom itself is a revolutionary way of looking at healthcare. Healthcare benefits are also great, but be warned. You can really only use these great benefits inside Zoom, so it is extremely hard to not be seen as a patient without knowing/working with who you are seeing.

Cons

Welcome to Zoom, a reality show with no goals and plenty of drama for all. Our CEO's are the naive un-informed bullies that have their eyes on the money prize and don't care who gets hurt. Upper/Middle management are the "pretty" self-involved simpletons who are too busy staring at their own reflection in a mirror or micromanaging the game in their favor by creating endless useless drama. Providers are the go-getters who are getting burnt out because they are carrying the team of simpletons and somehow get tricked believing there is a prize. Then there are the ZA's/help-team/benefits; the lowest positions within. The people on the show who leave early because they take one look at how the game is played and realize they have no idea how the heck they got on the show and ain't nobody got time for that mess. However, in all seriousness and jokes aside, there are drawbacks to being on this show. Providers are pushed to the limits from crackdowns on coding, timeliness, zoom terms, you name it. The only relief from this it seems is if you are willing to have intimate relationships with higher up management, which seems to be working for some people. Associates are expected to run an urgent care clinic but viewed as fast food workers. We are all payed the same, no matter if you are at a slow clinic, fast clinic, or the emergency clinic (where you are asked to do so much more). But just because you work at a bigger Wendy's doesn't mean you should get paid more, or so I've heard. Associates are given one week of training, and then are responsible for managing a clinic, most of the time with just you and virtual friends over chat. As an associate it is very, very hard the first 6 months. You are responsible for managing an entire clinic, just a few examples are inventory, medications, tray setups, scheduling, and explaining insurance to patients. That is why the turnover rate for associates is at an all-time high, and is a very stressful job to be successful at. We are set up for failure, and only some survive. You not only will have to have a LARGE list of job expectations, you will also have to answer to a manager you see once per month (if you are lucky) who has never done your job or understand your hardships. They will spend 5 hours with you nitpicking every little detail and then disappear like a reality show host in a cloud of smoke. HR is a joke or maybe just a rumor that we have a department at all, because they are non-existent and impossible to get ahold of. It seems as if it is a myth that employees have rights. If you do have an HR issue, enjoy the theatrics of being told they take things very seriously and expect your complaint will be brushed aside or brought up to you as ammo the next time you screw up and eliminated from the show. If there is any blame or extra work, it is put on the ZA's no questions asked. Drama is a key factor in a reality show, so let's not forget that little tidbit. The drama that the upper management/investors create between HQ and the clinics is better than most reality shows, so grab some popcorn. As an associate we chat with benefits/help-team members, but are never given the chance to be introduced to create endless drama and mis-understanding between the two groups. One group sits in front of a computer all day with supervisors breathing down their necks and rudely talking to clinical teams not understanding what we are going through or what we do in clinic. The Meanwhile the clinic is stressed out and begging for just a simple break to be able to go to the bathroom. The mis-understanding is a ploy to feed the drama and keep the show alive. So let me ask this, how are our shows ratings?

1.0
Feb 6, 2017

Plan to be on call 24/7 with no regard for work life balance

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Competitive pay, self-starters, free breakfast snacks and comfortable corporate offices.

Cons

Lack of communication and difficult interpersonal relationships. Lack of vision at a leadership level with unrealistic expectations of work life balance. Salaried employees can plan to work at home on Saturday and Sundays. The boss will likely be calling you at 10pm on weekends. Employees are constantly asked to do assignments they are unqualified to complete and outside the scope of work. With a high turn over rate, projects are constantly started but never completed.

1.0
Jan 20, 2017

Failure

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great co-workers - that's all

Cons

This company is awful to work for. The management not only does not care about their employees they are condescending, rude, and have no respect for their workers. At first, you will think that this job is great and the business model is innovative, but for a company that has been around 10 years and still calls themselves a "start-up" they have some serious issues they need to sort out. They fail to be "transparent", which is a word they throw around so much I'm not so sure they understand what the actual definition is. They are constantly changing policies and workflow without discussing it with the front-end and then make you feel like you have an opinion by saying they want feedback. Also, if you do not say, do, and agree with everything they say you run the risk of being put on probation or even fired.

Viewing 22 - 24 of 381 Reviews

Glassdoor has 392 ZoomCare reviews submitted anonymously by ZoomCare employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if ZoomCare is right for you.